From E&E News:
The agency’s fire suppression efforts would get a $148 million
increase – to just under $1 billion – under the plan, a total based on
the 10-year average of fire suppression costs. Last year, the Forest
Service spent $1.4 billion fighting fires, the National Interagency
Fire Center said.
The Bush administration budget proposal would provide $297 million for
projects to reduce hazardous fuels, down from $310 million in fiscal
2008. Fire preparedness would fall to $588 million from $666 million
in fiscal 2008.
Several lawmakers last week slammed the proposed budget, saying it
overemphasizes firefighting at the cost of fire prevention and forest
restoration. . . Kimbell will be the sole witness before House
appropriators on Wednesday. The chairman of the Interior subcommittee,
Rep. Norm Dicks (D-Wash.), was also highly critical of the agency’s
proposed budget cuts.
The Forest Legacy Program, which helps conserve threatened private
forests, would be reduced $40 million, to $12.5 million. The budget
would also eliminate $40 million that Dicks placed in the fiscal 2008
budget for road decommissioning and reclamation.
“The Forest Service has just gotten crushed,” Dicks said in an
interview last week. “It’s cut 16 percent … and they don’t have enough
money over there to do the trail work, the road work, the forestry
with the states, the conservation.”
Witness
- Abigail R. Kimbell, Chief, U.S. Forest Service
House Appropriations Committee
Senate Appropriations Committee
Interior and Environment Subcommittee
B-308 Rayburn
13/02/2008 at 10:00AM
Witnesses * Dr. Anthony L. Westerling, University of California,
Merced * Dr. Roger B. Hammer, Department of Sociology, Oregon State
University * Albert C. Hyde, Consultant, Brookings Institution’s Center
for Executive Education * Robin Nazzarro, Director for Natural
Resources and Environment, GAO * Kathleen
Tighe, Deputy Inspector General, USDA * Kirk
M. Rowdabaugh, President, National Association of State Foresters and
Arizona State Forester * James Cason, Asst. Secretary for Policy &
Budget, Department of Interior * Mark E. Rey, Under Secretary for
Natural Resources & Environment, USDA
House Appropriations Committee
Senate Appropriations Committee
Interior and Environment Subcommittee
B-308 Rayburn
12/02/2008 at 10:00AM
The Select Committee on Energy Independence & Global Warming will hold a
hearing on Thursday, November 1, at 9:30 a.m. in room
TBD. The hearing is entitled, “Wildfires and
the Climate Crisis.” Witnesses will be by invitation only.
See Markey’s dear colleague letter on the
topic.
House Energy Independence and Global Warming Committee
01/11/2007 at 09:30AM
Posted by Brad Johnson on 31/10/2007 at 11:00AM
Rep. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) is on Daily Kos asking for
questions for
tomorrow’s Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming
hearing, Wildfires and the Climate
Crisis.
In an effort to expand the dialogue around this issue, I am seeking
ideas, thoughts and questions prior to the hearing. Please have a look
at the hearing information below and then post your thoughts in the
comment section of this blog. Time for Q&A is limited during
Congressional hearings, but I ]will read all posts beforehand in an
effort to inject your ideas into this important debate.
Posted by Brad Johnson on 26/10/2007 at 04:35PM
Last week, Markey sent this dear colleague letter (forwarded to Hill
Heat) on the connection between
wildfires and global warming, the subject of a Global Warming Committee
hearing
next week:
Record-Breaking Forest Fires in Western United State Increasingly
Fueled By Global Warming
October 19, 2007
Dear Colleague,
Evidence shows that as a result of global warming, forest fires in our
western states are burning more frequently and with greater intensity
than we have ever seen before. Last year was the worst fire season in
recorded history and this season is already second, with eight million
acres burned.
What has brought this change about? A study published in the journal
Science in 2006 revealed the frightening conclusion that global
warming is contributing to the increased loss of our forests to fire.
This publication revealed the impact of global warming, even while
controlling for land use and management practices which also effect
forest fires.
According to the Science paper, “Wildfires have consumed increasing
areas of western United States forests in recent years, and
fire-fighting expenditures by federal land-management agencies now
regularly exceed US$1 billion/year. Hundreds of homes are burned
annually by wildfires, and damages to natural resources are sometimes
extreme and irreversible.” [1]
Global Warming’s impact on fires in the West and the threat that an
increasing number of wild fires pose will be featured on 60 Minutes
this Sunday, Oct. 21, at 7 p.m. ET/PT. 60 Minutes will speak with
author Tom Swetnam, an author on the 2006 Science paper, on the role
global warming has played on the frequency and intensity of these
mega-fires. I encourage you watch this program to learn more about
this important issue.
Sincerely,
Edward J. Markey
Member of Congress
[1] C. Whitlock, Nature 432, 28 (2004).